About
“Robert Kushner is arguably the most significant decorative artist working today…Kushner’s art goes against the prevailing trend toward the anti- or nonaesthetic, which takes revenge on life. He chooses instead to affirm the wonder of existence.” — Donald Kuspit, Artforum, Summer 2007.
Robert Kushner‘s newest work presents some striking departures and some reiterations of themes that have been integral to his work for decades. The most visible introduction is a bold use of geometricized patterns that swirl through the backgrounds of his new floral compositions, echoing, amplifying and sometimes even undermining the rhythms of the more naturally drawn floral elements.
In some ways, this use of pattern refers back to some of his early experiments from the 1970s combining geometric pattern with floral and figurative elements. However, he now utilizes a full spectrum of color, gold, silver and patinated copper leaf and a fracturing of the patterns to create paintings that are both complex and exciting to decode. Robert Kushner has continually addressed controversial and often subversive issues involving the interaction of decoration and art and has been considered one of the founders of the Pattern and Decoration movement. In this new body of work Robert Kushner’s paintings remain overtly beautiful and unapologetically opulent. His exotic and unique color sense has become even broader within this new series, the emotional range varies from somber and contemplative to exuberant and celebratory.
Robert Kushner’s work has been exhibited extensively in the United States, Europe and Japan since 1975 when one of his paintings was included in the Whitney Biennial. In 1984, Robert Kushner was the subject of one-person exhibitions at both the Whitney Museum, and the Brooklyn Museum, and in 1987, a mid-career summary of his work was organized by the Philadelphia Institute of Contemporary Art.
A monograph on Robert Kushner’s three decades of artistic work, entitled Gardens of Earthly Delights, with text by Alexandra Anderson-Spivy and Holland Cotter, was published by Hudson Hills Press in 1997. A compilation of Kushner’s recent paintings on Japanese screens as well as canvas, written by Michael Duncan, was published by Pomegranate in 2006.
In 2004, Robert Kushner installed two monumental mosaic murals, 4 Seasons Seasoned, at the 77th Street and Lexington Avenue subway station. In 2010, an 80 foot long marble mosaic, Welcome, was installed at the new Raleigh Durham International Airport in North Carolina.
Robert Kushner’s works are in the permanent collections of museums around the world: The Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, The National Gallery of Art, The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Tate Gallery, London, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, The Denver Art Museum, Galleria degli Ufizzi, Florence, J. Paul Getty Trust, Los Angeles, Museum Ludwig, St. Petersburg, and The Philadelphia Museum of Art.
The Performance Archive
Read About ‘Robert Kushner and Friends Eat Their Clothes’ and other performances
Dorothy Browdy Kushner (1909-2000)
Discover the artwork of California Modernist, Dorothy Browdy Kushner.
“During my childhood, there was nothing more interesting than my mother’s studio: big, odd, eccentric, full of energy and always full of ideas. A decaying taxidermied deer hovered over the door. The word “Studio” in her bold calligraphy – white on the dark green wall. Outdoor tables, metal racks and hanging pots of succulents populated the space. The old dress mannequin left over from the fur business with arms that could be rearranged into the most alarming tableaux. The big work table, cleared off periodically for large parties or printmaking sessions. And, of course, her most recent abstractions on easels, changing, morphing on a daily basis.” - Robert Kushner